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More than 100 migrants stormed the
Channel Tunnel early Saturday, penetrating a third of the way through and
attacking staff in an incident that halted overnight traffic.

The attempt to go through the tunnel from France to Britain came as the daily flow of thousands of migrants and refugees flocking to Europe's shores showed little sign of easing, with 168,000 migrants and refugees arriving in September alone, UN figures showed.

Most are seeking refuge in Germany or Sweden, but others have continued their journey to France in the hope of somehow crossing the Channel to reach England.

Traffic through the Channel Tunnel, which connects Britain and France, was halted for more than seven hours after a group of 113 migrants stormed into the tunnel in the hope of reaching the other side.

Train journeys resumed Saturday but with delays of up to three hours.

Eurotunnel, which operates the complex, said the incident was unprecedented, with migrants aggressively attacking its staff.

"This has never been seen before, it was a determined and well-planned attack," a spokesman told AFP of the incident, which took place shortly after midnight (2230 GMT Friday) at the entrance to the tunnel near the northern French port city of Calais.

He said the group "ran through the terminal, pinning a number of staff members to the ground and throwing stones at them."

A police source told AFP that earlier Friday evening there had been a substantial movement of migrants through Calais and towards the tunnel entrance "in the presence of No Border militants" -- an activist group backing free movement in Europe.

As Europe struggles with its biggest migration crisis since World War II, thousands have made their way towards France's northern coast in the hope of finding passage across the Channel to England.

Fabienne Buccio, head of the Pas-de-Calais region, said the group had demonstrated "a certain level of aggressiveness" during the breach.

A determined attempt

"Normally they stop before the security forces, but this time they wanted to get through," she told AFP, saying they had managed to get a third of the way through the tunnel, which stretches some 50 kilometres (30 miles).

Buccio said two police and four migrants sustained light injuries in the incident.

French border police were repairing a large breach of nearly 30 metres (yards) in one of the many fences around the site.

Eurotunnel said it had closed the tunnel at around 12:30 am (2230 GMT on Friday) and services resumed by around 8:00 am.

Shortly afterwards, there was another attempt at Calais port when 300 migrants tried to get into the terminal through several different entrances as well as trying to board lorries, port security officials told AFP.

But they began to disperse when the police turned up around 10:30 am and blocked off the ring road leading to the port, an AFP correspondent said.

In August, the interior ministers of France and Britain signed an agreement to set up a new "command and control centre" to tackle smuggling gangs in Calais.

The move came after several weeks of attempts to penetrate the sprawling Eurotunnel site, the biggest of which was on August 3, when there were 1,700 attempts to get in.

Since then, major work to step up security has seen new barriers erected and more staff deployed along with sniffer dogs. The number of attempted break-ins has fallen to around 100 per night, police say.

Such attempts can be fatal: in the past three months, some 13 people have died while trying to reach the tunnel.

'Schengen's borders broken'

Meanwhile at Hungary's Beremend crossing on the border with Croatia, buses were awaiting to pick up the new arrivals after 4,987 people crossed on Friday, taking to 300,159 the total number who have entered so far this year.

Similar scenes were playing out on Croatia's border with Serbia with buses waiting to ferry the new arrivals directly to the Hungarian border. Zagreb said it had logged 5,000 new arrivals on Friday, taking the total since mid-September to 100,066 people.

Hungary is attaching razor wire to a fence erected at its border with Croatia, in a possible prelude to sealing the frontier to thousands of migrants.

Austria said it registered 2,683 new arrivals on Friday and another 2,363 in the early hours of Saturday.

The rally attracted a crowd of 60,000 according to the organisers, 20,000 according to police figures.

"All the refugees are welcome. It doesn't matter which war, persecution or other cause has pushed them to flee," said a spokesman for the collective of pro-asylum groups that organised the show of support.

With little end in sight, Norwegian Prime Minister Erna Solberg said she feared for Europe's borderless Schengen zone, urging countries to shore up their external frontiers.